Madhopur Headworks


Madhopur Headworks is a barrage on the Ravi River in the Indian state of Punjab. It is located in the Pathankot district on the border with Jammu and Kashmir. The Upper Bari Doab Canal off-taking from Madhopur irrigates agricultural lands in Punjab and provides water to the cities of Gurdaspur, Batala and Amritsar.
The headworks was one of the first irrigation projects constructed in Punjab during the British Raj. It irrigated lands in the Gurdaspur, Amritsar and Lahore districts of the undivided Punjab. During the partition arrangements, Cyrill Radcliffe allocated three tehsils of Gurdaspur district to India in part to maintain the integrity of the canal system from Madhopur.
After independence, India signed the Indus Waters Treaty with Pakistan obtaining the exclusive use of waters from the Ravi River. Subsequently, India rebuilt the Madhopur headwork as a full barrage. Pakistan continues to use the UBDC canal network within its territory, replacing the Ravi waters by waters from Chenab via the BRB Canal.

Antecedents

A canal by name Hasli canal was constructed during the reign of Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan, taking water from Madhopur to Lahore. It was planned by Ali Mardan Khan and executed by Mullah Ala'ul-Mul Tuni.
In the 19th century, the Sikh emperor Ranjit Singh refurbished the canal and extended it with another branch to Amritsar.
According to scholar Ian Stone, these early canals were defective in many ways. They did not utilise masonry structures and easily gave way to floods. They were also prone to silt deposits and therefore had to be periodically refurbished.

British projects

After conquering Punjab from the Sikhs in 1849, the British East India Company rebuilt the canals under the name Upper Bari Doab Canal. It was planned and carried out by engineers Joseph Henry Dyas and James Crofton. Providing employment to the disbanded Sikh soldiers via agriculture is said to have been the main motivation for its urgent construction. The new canals were opened in 1859 and irrigated agricultural lands in Gurdaspur, Amritsar and Lahore districts. No headworks were constructed at this time due to apprehensions that they would not be able to withstand the floods of the Ravi River. A side channel of the river with a weir and falling shutters regulated the canal waters. A bridge with 23 arched openings 10 feet wide was constructed for this purpose. Modern commentators also note that the canal was constructed with an excessive slope of 0.05 m/km which caused erosion of its bed.
The Madhopur headwork was added during 1875–1879. It consisted of a long weir across the Ravi river, with the crest varying from 3 feet to 6 feet above the bed of the river. The last 300 feet towards on the left held undersluices with 12 openings of 20 feet width and 3–4 feet height. They were operated by iron gates.
Even though the canal system was capable of carrying flows of per second, the headwork supplied a maximum of per second. The main line of the canal ran to after which it divided into a main branch and a Kasur branch near the town of Gurdaspur. The two branches had further subbranches leading to Lahore and Sobraon respectively.
Most of these areas were later scenes of conflict during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965.

Partition of India

Modern development

In 1955, a full barrage was constructed at Madhopur after the original weir of the Madhopur headwork got damaged in a flood. Over the next two years, a Madhopur–Beas Link canal was also added, to link the Ravi waters to the Beas River via the Chaki nalla.
The UBDC canal network was remodelled during 2001–2005 after the construction of the Ranjit Sagar Dam. It presently carries up to per second, distributing them to seven branches and 247 distributaries. The total length of the canal network is and cultivates of land.